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  2. Dream (YouTuber) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_(YouTuber)

    He was awarded with 5th place at the time in the "1.16+ random seed glitchless" category. [13] Accusations of Dream cheating in these speedruns first arose on October 16, when another Minecraft speedrunner, in now-deleted Twitter posts, reported seeing higher drop rates for key items in one of the speedrunning attempts that Dream submitted. [56]

  3. European Speedrunner Assembly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Speedrunner_Assembly

    Minecraft: 1.16 Random Seed Glitchless No Reignex $10,000 A second prize pool of $20,000 was provided by Dream, offering $4,000 for the first five runs under 15 minutes. Held online due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. May 28–31, 2021 [121] Super Mario Sunshine: Any% JJsrll $5,000 Held online due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

  4. Speedrunning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speedrunning

    Speedrun of a SuperTux level. Speedrunning is the act of playing a video game, or section of a video game, with the goal of completing it as fast as possible.Speedrunning often involves following planned routes, which may incorporate sequence breaking and exploit glitches that allow sections to be skipped or completed more quickly than intended.

  5. Map seed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_seed

    In video games using procedural world generation, the map seed is a (relatively) short number or text string which is used to procedurally create the game world ("map"). "). This means that while the seed-unique generated map may be many megabytes in size (often generated incrementally and virtually unlimited in potential size), it is possible to reset to the unmodified map, or the unmodified ...

  6. Tool-assisted speedrun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tool-assisted_speedrun

    Tool-assisted speedrunning relies on the same series of inputs being played back at different times always giving the same results. The emulation must be deterministic with regard to the saved inputs, and random seeds must not change. Otherwise, a speedrun that was optimal on one playback might not even complete it on a second playback.

  7. Procedural generation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procedural_generation

    Different models can be generated by changing both deterministic parameters and a random seed. In computing, procedural generation is a method of creating data algorithmically as opposed to manually, typically through a combination of human-generated content and algorithms coupled with computer-generated randomness and processing power.

  8. Random seed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_seed

    A random seed (or seed state, or just seed) is a number (or vector) used to initialize a pseudorandom number generator.. A pseudorandom number generator's number sequence is completely determined by the seed: thus, if a pseudorandom number generator is later reinitialized with the same seed, it will produce the same sequence of numbers.

  9. Randomness extractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randomness_extractor

    Intuitively, an extractor takes a weakly random n-bit input and a short, uniformly random seed and produces an m-bit output that looks uniformly random. The aim is to have a low d {\displaystyle d} (i.e. to use as little uniform randomness as possible) and as high an m {\displaystyle m} as possible (i.e. to get out as many close-to-random bits ...